PeptideUniv

CJC-1295 Dosage & Reconstitution Calculator

This CJC-1295 reconstitution calculator converts vial mg + BAC water mL into concentration (mg/mL), draw amount (mL), and U‑100 units. Use it to double‑check mixing math, avoid mg vs mL mistakes, and keep measurements consistent across weeks. Enter your vial strength, how much BAC water you added, and your target dose in mg—then read the exact volume and syringe units to draw.

Educational and research purposes only — not medical advice. Reconstitution guide →

This application is for research and educational purposes only and does not provide medical advice. Always consult a licensed healthcare professional before making any medical or health-related decisions.

How to Use the CJC-1295 Calculator

  1. Select vial mg: choose how many mg are in the vial.
  2. Select BAC water mL: choose how many mL you added.
  3. Select target dose (mg): pick your desired target amount in mg.
  4. Read the result: the calculator shows concentration (mg/mL) plus the draw amount in mL and U‑100 units.
U‑100 clarification: 100 units = 1.0 mL (so 10 units = 0.1 mL, 20 units = 0.2 mL).

How the reconstitution math works

The calculator uses simple unit conversions based on your vial strength (mg) and BAC water volume (mL):
  • Concentration (mg/mL) = vial mg ÷ BAC water mL
  • mL draw amount = dose (mg) ÷ concentration (mg/mL)
  • U‑100 units = mL draw amount × 100
U‑100 tip: 100 units = 1.0 mL (so 10 units = 0.1 mL, 40 units = 0.4 mL).

Example CJC-1295 calculation

Example inputs: 5 mg vial + 2 mL BAC + 0.2 mg target dose.
  • Concentration: 5 mg ÷ 2 mL = 2.5 mg/mL
  • Draw amount: 0.2 mg ÷ 2.5 mg/mL = 0.08 mL
  • U‑100 units: 0.08 mL = 8 units
Example inputs are for demonstrating the math only. Always verify your vial label and your mix inputs.
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Calculator Input
Peptide in Vial (mg)
BAC Water to Add (mL)
Desired Dose (mg)
Syringe Size (units)
Tip: U‑100 — 100 units = 1 mL (10 units = 0.1 mL).
Results
For a dose of 0.25 mg, draw to
12.5 units
on the syringe.
100u syringe
Concentration
1.00
mg/mL
Doses per Vial
8
total doses
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Common CJC-1295 Dosing Mistakes

  • Mixing up mg and mL (they measure different things).
  • Changing BAC water volume without recalculating the dose.
  • Using the wrong syringe scale (U‑100 vs other syringes).
  • Rounding too aggressively and drawing inconsistent volumes over time.
  • Copying “units” from a different concentration/mix.

Why Accurate CJC-1295 Dosing Matters

After reconstitution, dosing becomes a conversion problem: you choose an amount in mg, but you inject a volume in mL (and often measure on a U‑100 syringe). Consistent conversions help you avoid simple math errors and keep your measurements repeatable when you’re logging or following a schedule.

CJC-1295 Scheduling & Protocol Planning

Once your numbers are verified, save it as a protocol, set reminders, and export to calendar/PDF with Pro.

Start in the full app: open the full calculator and save your protocol after you confirm your vial label and inputs.

Related calculators

Compare mixes across tools that use the same reconstitution math (mg, mL, and U‑100 units):

Frequently Asked Questions

What are U‑100 syringe units?

For U‑100 syringes, 100 units = 1.0 mL. That means 10 units is 0.1 mL, and 20 units is 0.2 mL.

Do I need to recalculate if I change the amount of BAC water?

Yes. Changing BAC water changes the concentration (mg/mL), which changes the volume (mL) and U‑100 units you draw for the same target dose in mg.

What does “DAC” vs “no‑DAC” mean?

These labels are commonly used in product listings to describe formulation differences in research products. This calculator does not assume a specific formulation—it only uses the vial mg and BAC water you enter.

Why is CJC‑1295 often mentioned with Ipamorelin?

In research communities, CJC‑1295 and Ipamorelin are often discussed together. Regardless of context, the reconstitution math is the same: vial mg and BAC water mL determine concentration, which determines mL and U‑100 units.

Important Disclaimer

This application is for research and educational purposes only and does not provide medical advice. Always consult a licensed healthcare professional before making any medical or health-related decisions.